Western Electric: a Survey of Recent Western Australian Electronic Music

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Western Electric: a Survey of Recent Western Australian Electronic Music Edith Cowan University Research Online Sound Scripts 2005 Western Electric: A survey of recent Western Australian electronic music Lindsay Vickery Follow this and additional works at: https://ro.ecu.edu.au/csound Part of the Interdisciplinary Arts and Media Commons, and the Music Commons Refereed papers from the Inaugural Totally Huge New Music Festival Conference, This Conference Proceeding is posted at Research Online. https://ro.ecu.edu.au/csound/5 Western Electric: A survey of recent Western Australian electronic music Lindsay Vickery La Salle-SIA College of the Arts, Singapore Abstract This paper surveys developments in recent Western Australian electronic music through the work of a number of representative artists in a range of internationally recognised genres. The article follows specific cases of practitioners in the fields of Sound Art (Alan Lamb and Hannah Clemen), live and interactive electronics (Jonathan Mustard and Lindsay Vickery) and noise/lo-fi electronics (Cat Hope and Petro Vouris) and glitch/electronica (Dave Miller and Matt Rösner). Like all Australian states Western Australia has a comparatively large land mass which has developed a highly centralized population (over 75% of inhabitants) in its capital city Perth. As a result this paper is principally a survey of recent activity in Perth, rather than the whole state. Perth is also rather peculiar, being a medium-sized city (roughly 1.5 million) that is separated from other similarly sized centres by four to five hours by air. This paper will consider some of the possible effects of this isolation in the context of the development of a range of practices and methods in electronic music that reflect similar directions elsewhere in the world. I have chosen a cross section of eight artists working across a range of genres that all utilise electronics as a fundamental component of their work. The paper is a companion in some respects to my article for the journal Organised Sound (2001).1 Any survey of activities in provincial city must first consider the problem of documentation. Australia itself is a provincial country with a population of predominantly European origins, traditions and outlook. Despite the existence of many innovative artists working in a range of New Music and experimental music genres, publications on the work of Australian composers and sound artists is relatively poorly documented. Perth faces a double difficulty, being both a minor subset of this problem (with 8% of the countrys population), as well as being out of sight and mind of the other principal population centres that are for the most part situated (by Australian standards) relatively close to one another. This paper is intended to redress a lack of printed material on the developments of Western Australian composers and sound artists working with electronics. Since my last article the problem of documentation has been somewhat redressed through an increasing number of articles published by artists on their own work notably in the Australasian Computer Music Journal and conference proceedings such as this one (see Appendix below). There has also been an increasing trend for composers and sound artists to appear on the radar now through collaboration with artists working in fields that have a stronger tradition of documentation such as the visual arts (where the artwork is less ephemeral) and sciences. Finally, the ubiquitous internet increasingly provides evidence of the activities of artists both above and underground. The problem with internet of course is that the searcher must know what is being searched for. This is the reason that a paper such as this is perhaps only possible for someone with inside knowledge of the scene such as myself. The negative side of such proximity is of course personal bias (and perhaps a tendency to overrate ones own contributions). So it is should be with these warnings in mind dear reader, but with the knowledge that this flawed reflection might be one of very few to be found, that, if you will, you proceed. Sound Art Alan Lamb Alan Lamb is probably Western Australias best-known sound artist. His principal medium is the meticulously recorded vibration of very long wires. Although this phenomenon was first noticed at the very beginning of the telegraphic era,2 and has been explored by others such as the American composer Alvin Sound Scripts: Proceedings of the Inaugural Totally Huge New Music Festival Conference 2005, 24 vol. 1 (2006) Lucier, Lamb has however examined “wire music” almost exclusively and to an unprecedented extent over some twenty years. Luciers work “Music on a Long Thin Wire” (1965) explored the complex and unpredictable nature of the long wires as a musical installation in an informal way: When I started making the piece, I just didnt bother to do any analysis or learning about the wire tension, mass and weight. I just set it up between a couple of tables and discovered that the imperfection of the way it was installed made a very interesting and wonderful sound. It was always changing. Thats the interesting thing about it—it isnt fixed like a string on a piano. Its subject to all kind of internal and external things.3 The vibrations in Luciers wire were driven by an electromagnet (the inversion of the guitar string and pick- up configuration). In contrast Lambs recordings predominantly document the natural vibrations of wires, and a finished work may be based on forty hours or so of “field recordings.” His earliest site dating from the mid 1970s was a set of abandoned telegraph wires in Western Australias the Great Southern region. He has had numerous other sites over the years, by necessity removed as much as possible from the hum of human activity. Typically recordings are made over long periods while Lamb is camped nearby, facilitating numerous experiments with different recording techniques and opportunities to sample the wires under varied atmospheric conditions. The recordings are then catalogued by Lamb, before their assemblage into large scale sound works of often vastly varied character. Lambs wire music has been documented relatively thoroughly,4 however the sounds themselves seem mercifully resistant to reinterpretation. Lamb also takes an “open source” approach to his recordings, making them available to other artists. But despite being appropriated (in the most well intentioned way) by artists of Ambient music, New Age, improvisation and New Music persuasions (myself included) and completely reinterpreted from scratch (Night Passage Demixed),5 Lambs recordings retain an irreducible “essence” (as Pierre Schaeffer would term it) which is a testament to his success in capturing the raw, primal quality of these sounds minus the artists ego. “Wire music” continues to be a unique contribution to the soundscape, and its curious affinity with the Australian outback also remains one of the key qualities in its international profile. The recent inclusion of Lambs assemblages in a film about the notorious “backpacker murders” attests to its evocative and perhaps unnerving connection with the Australian outback.6 Lamb has gradually shifted his working methods from analogue to digital, and even shifted on occasion from laborious studio mixing to create his work in real-time via a collaboration with British sampling violinist Kaffe Matthews. He was a featured artist at Melbournes Liquid Architecture Festival in 2005, where his work was diffused by Philip Samartzis, and Lams unique compositions are likely to been causing ears to prick up for some time to come. Hannah Clemen Hannah Clemens work has followed a very logical path towards what might be seen as the very heart of the musical experience. Her early works inhabited a sound world not dissimilar from much New Music chamber music, influenced most perhaps by Ligeti. They rapidly evolved toward a more general exploration of musical texture and an increasing dialogue with the effect upon the audience of acoustical phenomena. This enquiry became closely linked to her extra-musical interest in meditation and associated religious practices, culminating in A-che Lha-mo (2000) for two clarinets, pre-recorded CD and live effects processing and sample triggering. The composer writes: A-che Lha-mo represents the evolution of an individuals consciousness from the intellectual to the intuitive, and how clarity of thought emerges when the scattered fragments of the “thinking” mind are united.7 The work included quasi-ritualistic elements in the positioning and movement of the performers, some of which were unrealisable for the first performance. Their absence however, drew Clemen on towards a more consistent and thorough investigation of the roles of composer, performer and audience in sound work. In particular the non-participatory, non-interactive nature of the audience/performer relationship. The works that followed increasingly sought to dissolve the barrier between audience and performer. This direction in music was perhaps implied by the works of Cage (or even Ives), but currently perhaps one of the best Sound Scripts: Proceedings of the Inaugural Totally Huge New Music Festival Conference 2005, 25 vol. 1 (2006) known exponents is American Pauline Oliveros (1932-present). It is not surprising then that Clemen has gravitated toward Oliveros work and research and attended workshops offered by her Deep Listening Foundation. Belly Breathe, Belly Brain (2002) and Pillars of Sleep (2002) created for visual artist Sarah Douglas installation contrappunto v (2002) began this evolution.
Recommended publications
  • A Major International Visual Arts Event in Western Australia
    A MAJOR INTERNATIONAL VISUAL ARTS EVENT IN WESTERN AUSTRALIA FEASIBILITY STUDY 2014 PREPARED BY INSIDE LANE CONTENTS EXECUTIVE SUMMARY ...................................................................... 4 SECTION ONE - PROCESS .................................................................... 9 Feasibility Process ............................................................................. 9 Audit ............................................................................................ 12 Analysis ........................................................................................ 29 SECTION TWO - ABORIGINAL VISUAL ARTS .......................................... 63 SECTION THREE - INDIAN OCEAN RIM ................................................ 92 SECTION FOUR - EXPERIMENTAL ARTS .............................................. 125 SECTION FIVE - THE BIG IDEA .......................................................... 136 SECTION SIX - EDUCATION .............................................................. 140 SECTION SEVEN - DIGITAL STRATEGY .................................................144 SECTION EIGHT - MARKETING ......................................................... 147 SECTION NINE - CORPORATE STRUCTURE .......................................... 150 SECTION TEN - PUBLIC PROGRAMMING ............................................. 151 SECTION ELEVEN - ABORIGINAL ART CENTRE DIGITAL RESIDENCY .......... 156 SECTION TWELVE - EVENT CREATION ................................................ 158 SECTION THIRTEEN - RECOMMENDATIONS
    [Show full text]
  • Emily O'grady Thesis
    Subverting the Serial Gaze: Interrogating the Legacies of Intergenerational Violence in Serial Killer Narratives Emily O’Grady Bachelor of Fine Arts (Honours) Creative Industries: Creative Writing and Literary Studies Queensland University of Technology Submitted in fulfilment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy 2018 1 Abstract This thesis subverts, disrupts and reimagines dominant narratives of fictional serial crime through a hybrid research paradigm of creative practice and critical analysis. The creative output of this thesis is an 80,000 word literary novel titled The Yellow House, accompanied by a 20,000 word critical exegesis. In the following, I argue that current fictional iterations of the serial killer literary genre are rigidly conservative, and remain fixed within the safe confines of genre conventions wherein the narrative bears little resemblance to how abject violence and the aftermath of serial crime plays out in real life. The broad framework of genre theory, accompanied by trauma theory, allows for an examination of the serial killer genre to identify the space in which my creative practice—an Australian, literary rendering of serial crime—fits as an extension and subversion of the genre. By reimagining the Australian serial killer narrative, I seek to challenge the reductive serial killer genre, and come to a potential offering of serial homicide that interrogates how the legacies of abject violence can be transmitted across generations. I do this by shifting the focus onto the aftermath of the crime and its numerous victims—in particular, the descendants of serial killers. The Yellow House presents a destabilising fictionalisation of serial crime that disrupts the conventions of the genre in order to contend with the complexity and instability of serial homicide.
    [Show full text]
  • Mullum School Touchdown Harsh Feedback Over Fl Ood Response
    THE BYRON SHIRE Volume 33 #14 Wednesday, September 12, 2018 S www.echo.net.au Phone 02 6684 1777 [email protected] [email protected] 23,200 copies every week DEMANDING THE BEST AND REGRETTABLY ACCEPTING LESS SINCE 1986 Mullum school touchdown Harsh feedback over fl ood response Paul Bibby We’ve subsequently had a test run during a possible fl ood event that Th e Byron Shire community has little didn’t eventuate and we found that faith in the ability of local authori- our warning systems and communi- ties such as Council and the police to cation had improved.’ provide them with accurate, timely Th e mistrust in local authorities information during floods, a new such as Council may have stemmed survey shows. from the unreliable information lo- And the results suggest that a size- cals received during the fl oods as- able majority of locals support meas- sociated with Cyclone Debbie last ures such as dredging, the removal of March. rock walls and new ocean outfalls to reduce the future fl ood risk. Confl icting info Th e survey, conducted by Byron Nearly 65 per cent of respondents Council to help it develop a fl ood said they had received confl icting risk management plan, found that information about fl oods in the past. Mullumbimby Public School students were excited to have crews from the Westpac Rescue Helicopter Service only the State Emergency Services ‘No-one was able to give me in- and the Little Ripper Drone Patrol drop-in for a visit on Friday.
    [Show full text]
  • Wolf Creek by Sonya Hartnett [Book Review]
    This may be the author’s version of a work that was submitted/accepted for publication in the following source: Ryan, Mark (2011) Wolf Creek by Sonya Hartnett [Book Review]. Senses of Cinema, 2011(61), pp. 1-2. This file was downloaded from: https://eprints.qut.edu.au/48070/ c Consult author(s) regarding copyright matters This work is covered by copyright. Unless the document is being made available under a Creative Commons Licence, you must assume that re-use is limited to personal use and that permission from the copyright owner must be obtained for all other uses. If the docu- ment is available under a Creative Commons License (or other specified license) then refer to the Licence for details of permitted re-use. It is a condition of access that users recog- nise and abide by the legal requirements associated with these rights. If you believe that this work infringes copyright please provide details by email to [email protected] Notice: Please note that this document may not be the Version of Record (i.e. published version) of the work. Author manuscript versions (as Sub- mitted for peer review or as Accepted for publication after peer review) can be identified by an absence of publisher branding and/or typeset appear- ance. If there is any doubt, please refer to the published source. http:// www.sensesofcinema.com/ 2011/ book-reviews/ wolf-creek-by-sonya-hartnett/ Wolf Creek by Sonya Hartnett review by Mark David Ryan Mark David Ryan is a Lecturer in Film and Television for the Creative Industries Faculty, Queensland University of Technology and an expert on Australian horror films.
    [Show full text]
  • Contributor Biographies
    Sound Scripts Volume 4 Article 20 1-1-2012 Contributor Biographies Follow this and additional works at: https://ro.ecu.edu.au/soundscripts Part of the Other Music Commons Recommended Citation (2012). Contributor Biographies. Sound Scripts, 4(1). Retrieved from https://ro.ecu.edu.au/soundscripts/vol4/iss1/20 This Contributor is posted at Research Online. https://ro.ecu.edu.au/soundscripts/vol4/iss1/20 et al.: Contributor Biographies CONTRIBUTOR BIOGRAPHIES KEYNOTE SPEAKER MARINA ROSENFELD Known equally as a composer of large-scale performances and an experimental turntablist working with hand-crafted dub plates, New York-based Marina Rosenfeld has been a leading voice in the increasing hybridisation between the domains of visual art and music. She has created chamber and choral works and a series of installation/performance works, mounted in monumental spaces, such as the Park Avenue Armory in New York and Western Australia's Midland Railway Workshops. Rosenfeld's work has been widely presented throughout Europe, North America and Australia. Recent collaborative projects include her duo with George Lewis (Sour Mash) and on the Room40 label featuring a collaboration with Jamaican vocalist Warrior Queen and cellist Okkyung Lee. Rosenfeld received her BA in Music from Harvard and an MFA from the California Institute of the Arts. She joined the faculty of Bard College's MFA program in 2003 and has co-chaired the department of Music/Sound since 2007. Rosenfeld is a 2011 recipient of both a Foundation for Contemporary Arts Grants to Artists award and an Artist Residency from the Headlands Center for the Arts. Previous awards include grants and honors from the New York State Council on the Arts, the New York Foundation for the Arts, the Park Avenue Armory, Harvestworks Digital Media Arts, Experimental Television Center, and Austria's ArsElectronica competition in digital musics.
    [Show full text]
  • PICA Concert 1 Musicfromadarkspace
    Decibel New Music Ensemble in partnership with TURA New Music and PICA Presents A VOICE FROM THE DARK SPACE Monday, 28 March, 2011, 8pm, Main Gallery Space, PICA. 1. Lindsay Vickery: Night Fragments (2011) for mezzo soprano, flute/alto flute, clarinet/bass clarinet, cello, keyboard and electronics [world premiere]. 2. Julian Day: Beginning to Collapse (2008) for alto flute, Bb clarinet, guitar, keyboard, cymbal, cello and backing track [WA premiere]. 3. Malcolm Riddoch: Variations on Electroacoustic Feedback (2010) for multiband EQ filter, alto flute and cello. 4. Cornelius Cardew: The Tigers Mind ‘Night Piece’ (1967) for voice, bass guitar, cello, bass clarinet, percussion and electronics. [WA premiere]. [Interval] 5. Alan Lamb: Musicians Coping with Infinity (2011) for infinity machine and mezzo soprano [world premiere]. 6. Adam Trainer: Drone Mosaic (2010) for alto flute, bass clarinet, guitar and cello and four backing tracks [world premiere]. 7. Cat Hope: Longing (2011) for voice, viola, cello, bass clarinet, percussion and electronics [world premiere]. 8. Ennio Morricone/Joan Baez: The Ballad of Sacco and Vanzetti (1971) arranged by Decibel for mezzo soprano, choir, bass clarinet, bass guitar, guitar, keyboard, drum set, viola and cello. Welcome to the first of three concerts at PICA in 2011. Decibel has deliberately chosen the gallery space to stage these concerts to engage with music that is not necessarily tied up with ‘concert’ conventions or specifications. Composers and installation artists have continued to explore different states in art, using the architectural qualities of music and sound to sculpt environments. Whether it is the feeling of a landscape, the sounds produced by the landscape, the effect of the room our environment is crucial to our understanding of music and sound.
    [Show full text]
  • Prejudicial Publicity: Victoria and New South Wales Compared
    2018 Restraining ‘Extraneous’ Prejudicial Publicity 1263 RESTRAINING ‘EXTRANEOUS’ PREJUDICIAL PUBLICITY: VICTORIA AND NEW SOUTH WALES COMPARED JASON BOSLAND* This article explores the powers available to courts in Victoria and New South Wales to restrain the media publication of ‘extraneous’ prejudicial material – that is, material that is derived from sources extraneous to court proceedings rather than from the proceedings themselves. Three sources of power are explored: the power in equity to grant injunctions to restrain threatened sub judice contempt, the inherent jurisdiction of superior courts and, finally, statutory powers in New South Wales under the Court Suppression and Non-publications Orders Act 2010 (NSW) and in Victoria under the Open Courts Act 2013 (Vic). It argues that the approach of the Victorian courts is much broader in terms of the scope and application of orders, which potentially explains why orders restraining extraneous material are more commonly made in Victoria than in New South Wales. It further argues that the Victorian approach presents some significant consequences for publishers. I INTRODUCTION The right to a fair trial is ingrained in the common law.1 It is also recognised as a fundamental human right,2 and, in some jurisdictions, as an express constitutional guarantee.3 According to the law, one of the ways that the right to * Associate Professor, Melbourne Law School, University of Melbourne; Co-Director, Centre for Media and Communications Law (CMCL), University of Melbourne. The author wishes to thank the staff of Melbourne Law School’s Law Research Service, especially Robin Gardner, Louis Ellis and Kirsten Bakker. Thanks also to Jonathan Gill and Vicki Huang for helpful advice, and to Tim Kyriakou, Claire Richardson and James Roberts for outstanding research assistance.
    [Show full text]
  • Contributor Biographies
    Sound Scripts Volume 1 Article 19 1-1-2009 Contributor Biographies Follow this and additional works at: https://ro.ecu.edu.au/soundscripts Part of the Other Music Commons Recommended Citation (2006). Contributor Biographies. Sound Scripts, 1(1). Retrieved from https://ro.ecu.edu.au/soundscripts/vol1/iss1/19 This Article is posted at Research Online. https://ro.ecu.edu.au/soundscripts/vol1/iss1/19 et al.: Contributor Biographies Contributor Biographies David Bennett teaches in English and Cultural Studies at the University Melbourne, where he was founding director of the Interdepartmental Cultural Studies programme. He has published widely on modernist and postmodernist cultural theory and practice, and the history of psychoanalysis, in journals such as Textual Practice, Postmodern Studies, New Literary History and Public Culture. His books include Multicultural States: Rethinking difference and identity, Rhetorics of History: Modernity and postmodernity, and Cultural Studies: Pluralism and theory. With musicologist Linda Kouvaras, he has been awarded an ARC Discovery Project Grant to research issues of postmodernism in contemporary Australian art music (2005-07). Joanne Cannon is one of Australia’s leading bassoonists and experimental musicians, working as an instrumentalist and composer. Winner of the Daffodil National Arts award for her bassoon composition for “Speak,” Joanne’s work is recognised for its combination of improvisation, experimental instruments and computer interaction. Joanne has also developed large scale works for dancers and musicians using lasers and sculpture. After beginning her career as an orchestral musician, Joanne has since extended the instrument’s repertoire by using improvised microtones and multi-phonics. Joanne plays a variety of double reed instruments including her amplified electronic Serpentine Bassoon.
    [Show full text]
  • Polonia in Australia
    1PMPOJBJO"VTUSBMJB $IBMMFOHFTBOE1PTTJCJMJUJFTJOUIF/FX.JMMFOOJVN &MJ[BCFUI%SP[EBOE%FTNPOE$BIJMM POLONIA IN AUSTRALIA CHALLENGES AND POSSIBILITIES IN THE NEW MILLENNIUM Australian-Polish Community Services, Melbourne POLONIA IN AUSTRALIA: CHALLENGES AND POSSIBILITIES IN THE NEW MILLENNIUM Edited by Elizabeth Drozd and Desmond Cahill This book is published at theLearner.com a series imprint of the UniversityPress.com First published in Australian in 2004 by Common Ground Publishing Pty Ltd PO Box 463 Altona Vic 3018 ABN 66 074 822 629 In association with Australian-Polish Community Services Inc. 77 Droop Street Footscray Vic 3011 www.theLearner.com Selection and editorial matter copyright © Australian-Polish Community Services Inc. 2004 Individual chapters © individual contributors 2004 All rights reserved. Apart from fair dealing for the purposes of study, research, criticism or review as permitted under the Copyright Act, no part of this book may be reproduced by any process without written permission from the publisher. National Library of Australia Cataloguing-in-Publication data: Where to Now? Polonia in Australia Conference 2003 : Moonee Ponds, Vic.). Australian-Polish Community Services Inc.: Polonia in Australia: challenges and possibilities in the new millennium ISBN 0 95779 745 1 ISBN 0 95779 746 X. (PDF) 1. Polish Australians - Services for - Congresses. 2. Polish Australians - Public welfare - Congresses. 3.Polish Australians - Social conditions - Congresses. I. Drozd, Elizabeth. II. Australian-Polish Community Services. III. Title. IV. Title: Polonia in Australia: challenges and possibilities in the new millennium. V. Title: Papers from the Where to Now? Polonia in Australia Conference. VI. Title: Polonia in Australia : challenges and possibilities in the new millennium.
    [Show full text]
  • Download the Milat Letters: the Inside Story from the Backpacker Murderer Free Ebook
    THE MILAT LETTERS: THE INSIDE STORY FROM THE BACKPACKER MURDERER DOWNLOAD FREE BOOK Alistair Shipsey | 274 pages | 07 Nov 2014 | Alistair Shipsey | 9780992497750 | English | United States BIOGRAPHY NEWSLETTER They say he had someone or others with him which we will never kw. You know the saying: There's no time like the present Nineteen-year-old Gibson was found in the fetal position riddled with stab wounds so deep that his spine had been severed and lungs punctured. Share this article Share. Item location:. Report a bad ad experience. Alistair Shipsey. He has been on hunger strikes, Even cut off his finger and wrapped it in paper And put it in an envelope addressed To the judge who has been rejecting his appeal Applications as he protests his innocence. Rod Milton. The shocking claims form part of his book The Milat Lettersself The Milat Letters: The Inside Story from the Backpacker Murderer in Australia last year and due for release in the UK at the end of the month. Related sponsored items Feedback on our suggestions - Related sponsored items. I ate it one handed. Passengers chant 'Off off off! Milat was recently diagnosed with oesophageal cancer and has been spending the remainder of his days in the medical ward of Long Bay jail undergoing chemotherapy. Britons living under Tier-3 lockdown rules will NOT get refunds for holiday and flights - but could be May 31, Chantal rated it did not like it. They had planned to meet friends, but never arrived. This book is just a compilation of the letters Ivan Milat wrote his nephew.
    [Show full text]
  • SMC2011 Template
    THE DECIBEL SCOREPLAYER - A DIGITAL TOOL FOR READING GRAPHIC NOTATION Cat Hope Lindsay Vickery Edith Cowan University Edith Cowan University [email protected] [email protected] ABSTRACT and one of the performers has a mathematical computer programming background. The other two performers are In 2009, the Decibel new music ensemble based in Perth, supportive of workshopping processes and a variety of Western Australia was formed with an associated approaches to new music, including working with manifesto that stated “Decibel seek to dissolve any electronics and improvisation. Decibel have sought to division between sound art, installation and music by support Australian, and specifically, Western Australia focusing on the combination of acoustic and electronic new music practice, and have commissioned over eighty instruments” [1]. The journey provided by this focus led Australian works since their inception. A large proportion to a range of investigations into different score types, of these works are from composers within the group, but resulting in a re-writing of the groups statement to many are from significant Australian composers, “pioneering electronic score formats, incorporating electronic artists and songwriters. There is also an mobile score formats and networked coordination international aspect in their repertoire, with the group performance environments” [2]. This paper outlines the having presented monograph concerts of works by US development of Decibel’s work with the ‘screen score’, composers Alvin Lucier and John Cage, as well as works including the different stages of the ‘Decibel by the late Italian composer Giacinto Scelsi and French ScorePlayer’, an application (App) for reading graphic musique concrete artist Lionel Marchetti.
    [Show full text]
  • A Study Guide by Marguerite O'hara
    © ATOM 2014 A STUDY GUIDE BY MARGUERITE O’HARA http://www.metromagazine.com.au ISBN: 978-1-74295-533-9 http://www.theeducationshop.com.au CONTENTS 2 CURRICULUM GUIDELINES 3 THE CRIME GENRE 5 MAP OF THE AREA 6 CAST AND CREW 7 PRE-VIEWING ACTIVITY 7 SYNOPSIS 7 STUDENT ACTIVITIES: WATCHING, REFLECTING AND RESPONDING 11 RESOURCES AND REFERENCES CURRICULUM GUIDELINES Catching Milat is a dramatic reconstruction of how mem- bers of the NSW Police Department tracked down and secured the conviction of a notorious killer Ivan Milat. His murderous spree took place over a number of years in the early 1990s. While the film does show something of how Milat is thought to have operated and managed to escape detection for some years, the program is more concerned with the police enquiry (catching Milat); how the investigat- ing team were able to link his movements and behaviour to the murders through a meticulous process of gathering INTRODUCTION evidence and following up earlier leads. Catching Milat is a two-part drama based on the events surrounding the investigation that led to the arrest and conviction of serial killer Ivan Milat. Most characters play the roles of actual people, but certain events and charac- ters have been created or changed for dramatic effect. Incorporating stylised flashbacks and archival footage, Catching Milat is a television mini-series that returns viewers to a time when backpacking was a rite-of-pas- sage for young people eager to explore the world. Ivan Milat was arrested in 1994. Catching Milat is the story of the men who brought him to justice.
    [Show full text]